Monday, February 4, 2013

Last Thursday we looked at economics as a science instead of
a religion.This week, to give the devil
his due, we look at how some people treat economics as a religion instead of as
a science.That is, they try to base
exchanges in civil society on status rather than contract, need instead of
equality in the exchange, and undermine the natural law.

We refer specifically to the neo-distributists: those who use
the language of distributism and advance the outward form of the Distributist
State without the inner substance, and who forsake reason by basing their
system on faith or expedience.We’ve
made this point many times over the years, but it always seems to excite some
comment — usually negative.This time,
as we might expect, the comment was that the commentator questioned our
assessment of John Mueller’s Redeeming
Economics, and demanded to know who the neo-distributists are to whom we
referred.

We named names in our original response, but will content
ourselves with generalities here.Why,
after all, wave a red flag in front of so much bull? — such as the claim
advanced in open defiance of clear papal teachings that distributism is a
“Catholic” system . . . when the Catholic Church is quite explicit that there
could be no such thing.

The neo-distributists to which we refer, then, are those who
have abandoned reliance on the natural law based on God’s Nature, self-realized
in His Intellect, and shifted to some form of a will-based understanding.Thus, the “proof” that they advance for
virtually everything is the appeal to authority, a logical fallacy, with the
straw man argument and the circular argument tied for second place.

For example, a typical neo-distributist will claim that
something is true because the pope, Chesterton, or Belloc said so.No — in the case of the pope, this gets the
doctrine of papal infallibility exactly backwards.Nothing is true because the pope says
so.Rather, the pope says so because it’s
true.The pope, not the reader or
hearer, is the one protected from error.

In the case of the Chesterbelloc, it often turns out (as it
does with papal statements), that the words have been edited or the meanings
changed, and thus a straw man argument constructed.In one notorious instance we came across
declarations that papal teachings give only labor title to property, and that
the freedom of association (liberty/contract) Pius XI stressed in Quadragesimo Anno as the basis for social
justice and thus the foundation of the common good “Is not strictly speaking
voluntary.”

The problem is that, trapped by the slavery of past savings
and rejecting Kelso and Adler, neo-distributists can see no other way except by abolishing the natural law to
achieve the goal of the Distributist State.The so-called Distributist State thereby becomes the Servile State by
losing its basis in reality and common sense.

It is no coincidence that the “Distributist Reading List” on
one well-known distributist website has as many books by Arthur Penty, the
founder of “guild socialism” who was booted from the distributist movement, as
by Chesterton and Belloc combined, or that socialists, even Marxists like E. F.
Schumacher are given a place of prominence.Sadly, neo-distributists in general make every error against which
Chesterton warned in The Dumb Ox, and
pat themselves on the back for their adherence to the teachings of the Master.

The bottom line here is that if a premise is flawed or
false, or a logical error is made in the argument, the conclusions may be true, but they are not necessarily true.You must, as Aquinas explained at the end of
his treatise On the Unity of the
Intellect Against the Averroists (and that Chesterton quoted in The Dumb Ox, possibly as a warning to
his more enthusiastic followers), prove your case not on documents of faith,
but by the reasons and statements of the philosophers themselves — really
prove, not just declare that something is true because so-and-so said so.